Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston, byname Pam
(born October 20, 1784, Broadlands, Hampshire, England—died October 18, 1865, Brocket Hall, Hertfordshire), English Whig-Liberal statesman whose long career, including many years as British foreign secretary (1830–34, 1835–41, 1846–51) and prime minister (1855–58, 1859–65), made him a symbol of British nationalism.

Early life

The christening of Henry John Temple in the “House of Commons church” of St. Margaret, Westminster, was appropriate. His father, a cultured grand seigneur and dilettante politician, failed in his ambition to convert his Irish peerage into a United Kingdom peerage, which would have condemned his son (known as Harry) to a seat in the House of Lords. Instead, with a break of less than a year (in 1835), Harry Temple was to sit in the Commons from 1807 until he died as prime minister on the eve of his 81st birthday. After two years in Italy and Switzerland with his family, young Temple went to Harrow School in May 1795. Its classical curriculum was supplemented by French, Italian, and some German from a tutor brought home from Italy. In November 1800, Temple entered the University of Edinburgh.

In April 1802 Temple succeeded to his father’s title and estates as 3rd Viscount Palmerston and to a burden of debt that conspired, along with a sense of public duty, to make him seek public office; the fact was, he could never afford to be out of office long. He soon began to extend and embellish the house and gardens of Broadlands in Hampshire and, from the mid-1820s, improved his Irish estates in County Sligo. Having survived a youth of ill health, he later displayed a rare stamina, cultivated by regular exercise. Entering St. John’s College, Cambridge, in October 1803, Palmerston was still an undergraduate when he contested the vacancy in the university parliamentary representation resulting from the death of William Pitt in January 1806. He lost then and again in the general election of 1807, but he sat for the University of Cambridge from 1811 to 1831.

Political life, 1807–30

Only after being made a junior lord at the admiralty in the Tory government of 1807 did Palmerston become a member of Parliament by a transaction with the patron of the pocket borough of Newport, Isle of Wight. Studious at Cambridge, though no recluse, the young junior minister was thought a bit of a prig. As he passed into middle age 20 years later, he was thought of politically as a dull dog; for, after refusing the chancellorship of the Exchequer from the prime minister Spencer Perceval in 1809, he took the office of secretary at war. The office was humdrum, and its parliamentary duties were light. He rejected the post office in 1821 because it would have taken him to the House of Lords; and he resisted other offers because they would have taken him to Dublin, the Caribbean, or Calcutta. Palmerston would not forgo the delights of the Londonsociety centring on Almack’s social club, the three principal hostesses of which—Lady Jersey, the Princess Lieven, and Lady Cowper (whom he married in 1839 after she was widowed)—were all probably his mistresses; he was known widely as “Lord Cupid.” Because in 1827 the ultra-Tories refused to serve under Canning, Palmerston at last reached the Cabinet. But the offer of the Exchequer by Canning was withdrawn, and it was as secretary at war that Palmerston sat in the cabinets of George Canning, Viscount Goderich, and the Duke of Wellington.

Known initially as a Pittite and condemned by Radicals as a follower of Viscount Castlereagh, who was hostile to civil liberties, Palmerston acquiesced in the switch from unmoving resolution to “Liberal Toryism” over which Lord Liverpool presided in 1821–23. But Palmerston was not an intimate of Canning and his follower, the financier and statesman William Huskisson, nor of Sir Robert Peel. Only after Canning’s death, when Palmerston applauded “the great strides which public opinion has made in the last few years,” could he be considered a Canningite. As such, he resigned, reluctantly, when Wellington drove Huskisson out of office in mid-1828; but he never closed the door to overtures from Wellington. He had owed his return to the Cambridge seat in Parliament in 1826 to the Whigs—he was opposed by two ministerial colleagues hostile (as he was not) to Catholic Emancipation—and of the Whigs who sat with him in the cabinets of Canning and Goderich, he said that he liked them much better than the Tories and agreed with them much more. Palmerston, whose maiden speech in February 1808 had been a defense of a British attack on the Danish fleet to deny it to Napoleon, became in Cabinet entranced with foreign affairs and adopted a position on events in Greece and Portugal in advance of the other Canningites. This he made public in the House on June 1, 1829, when he complained that Wellington had made Britain the keystone of the arch of European absolutism. The circulation of his speech as a pamphlet indicates that Palmerston had decided to play for high political stakes. By interrogating the Tory government from a Whiggish point of view all through 1830 and by rejoicing at the Paris revolution of that year, he qualified himself to become foreign secretary when Wellington’s resistance to all parliamentary reform led to the creation of a Whig-Canningite coalition under Earl Grey.

The Reform Bills of 1831 and 1832 were more considerable than Palmerston liked, and he tried to modify them. Failing, he blamed “the stupid old Tory party” for making them necessary by refusing minor concessions, emphasized the “final” nature of the 1832 Act, and proclaimed his confidence that the landed interest would continue to prevail in politics as he thought it should. From 1849 to 1865 he came to personify the opposition of the landsmen and many of the middle classes to the enfranchisement of trade unionists and to resist fiscal and legislative assaults on landed property, opining (with regard to Ireland) that “tenant right was landlord’s wrong.” After one term (1832–35) as member for South Hampshire, he was defeated; and for the rest of his life he represented the Devon market town of Tiverton. A racehorse owner, he combined the conservatism of the countryman with a concern for the expansion of the manufacturer’s foreign markets. His standard text was that reform in 1832 had prevented social revolution and that enlightened legislation thereafter was producing social peace. This made him proud of his country and more than ever inclined to exhort foreign autocrats and bureaucrats to behave like sensible Whigs and Canningites.

Palmerston believed that something like the British system of responsible government would be good for all European states and that it would become the norm (as by the first decade of the 20th century it had). No English ministry was doing its duty, he declared, if inattentive to the interests of constitutional states, which were Britain’s natural allies. He persuaded himself that “the selfish interests and political influence of England were best promoted by the extension of liberty and civilisation,” and even, against the evidence, that constitutional governments would be pro-British. Rebuked for “missionary diplomacy” not intended to lead to action but to inflame international relations, he retorted that ineffective protest was better than tacit acquiescence in wrong and that opinions were mightier than armies. He was charged with “disturbing the peace of Europe by giving encouragement to every revolutionary and anarchical set of men.” Yet his opinions on foreign and domestic matters were all of a piece. He did not want democratic or republican, least of all “Red,” regimes abroad any more than at home. But he regarded the mission of Lord Minto to the Italian courts, on the eve of the revolutions of 1848, as mediatorial, not inflammatory; its object was to show the rulers of Europe that they should have their minor revolutions, lest worse befall them.

Palmerston was a British nationalist; he said that the country had no permanent allies, only permanent interests. The idea that, because he applauded the cause of Liberalism in Europe, he wished to tear up the Treaty of Vienna is nonsense. It was true that he was instrumental in securing confirmation of the independence of Greece and Belgium; but for Polish, Magyar, and Romanian patriotic causes he lifted not a finger. Palmerston was a philhellene; but by the time he became foreign secretary the only question was whether Greece should be a viable size, wholly independent of Turkey and under the surveillance of Britain, France, and Russia. By 1832 he had achieved this objective.

The Belgian revolt of 1830 was a fait accompli, and it had become a British interest to secure Dutch recognition of it without allowing the French to profit by intervening. In this matter, as chairman of the London Conference, Palmerston first showed his diplomatic proficiency. The outcome was an independent constitutional Belgium, with its neutrality guaranteed by the Five Powers in a famous “scrap of paper.”

If he wanted Italian federation or unification, it was from no addiction to the national principle in the abstract, and, if he wanted the Austrians out of Italy, it was not primarily because they were illiberal. His view was that Austria had been put into northern Italy in 1815 to provide a barrier against French aggression. Through mismanagement the Austrians had contrived to raise so much “national hatred” against themselves that their presence in Italy was a danger to the general peace, and it was weakening the Habsburg Empire as well. An able speech in Parliament on July 21, 1849, gave the coldest comfort to the Hungarians, against whose bid for independence Austria had to seek Russian aid. Palmerston said, wholly sincerely, that “the political independence and liberties of Europe are bound up . . . with the maintenance and integrity of Austria as a great European Power.” Austria was, after all, Britain’s natural ally in the Balkans.

Palmerston’s fears of France and Russia

Of the great powers, Palmerston felt that only Russia and France might directly threaten British interests, which he interpreted widely and in which he certainly included all the routes to India and the Far East via the Mediterranean; from concern for India sprang Persian and Afghan wars as well as the Crimean War. It was Palmerston’s objective never to find France and Russia arrayed together against Britain and to practice the technique of “restraint by cooperation.” The France of Louis-Philippe acted for most of the 1830s as Britain’s ally, and Palmerston’s riposte to Metternich’s coalition of the three emperors (of Austria, Prussia, and Russia) at Münchengrätz in 1833 was the 1834 Quadruple Alliance of Britain and France with the constitutional parties in Spain and Portugal. The French, however, became irked at the restraining element in British cooperation and did not see why they should not be as predominant in Spain as the British were in Portugal. Relations, therefore, deteriorated even before there was an open breach in 1839–40 on the Eastern Question (regarding the Ottoman Empire). Palmerston’s mobilization of the powers to isolate France and confine Muḥammad ʿAlīPasha to Egypt gave him (1840) a major diplomatic and parliamentary triumph, achieved amid the doubts, fears, and opposition of Cabinet colleagues.

Relations with France were unnecessarily bad when Palmerston left office in 1841. His condemnation of Lord Aberdeen for appeasing France and the United States also contributed to a feeling in the highest Whig circles that he ought not to return to the foreign office; and his refusal to take any other appointment was made the excuse for the prime minister, Lord John Russell, declining to form a government to repeal the Corn Laws in December 1845. In mid-1846, when Russell did form a government, Palmerston became foreign secretary again. After the revolution in 1848, as in 1830, Palmerston was concerned with both protecting the new French regime and deterring it from going to war. He and the Tsar, both standing for the Treaty of Vienna and the balance of power, saluted one another from the twin rocks that stood amid the revolutionary tide.

The popular hero

In 1848–49 Palmerston was more intent upon preserving the general peace than upon patronizing Liberalism. In 1849–51, however, he won Radical applause for his denunciations of the cruelty of counterrevolutionaries; for his release of British arms to Sicilian insurgents and his later endorsement of William Ewart Gladstone’s exposure of King Ferdinand’s treatment of political prisoners; by his evident approval of the hostile reception given to the Austrian general Julius, Freiherr von Haynau, when he visited Britain; by his pressure on the Turks; and by his acceptance, when the defeated Hungarian patriot Lajos Kossuth visited Britain, of addresses describing the rulers of Austria and Russia in Kossuthian terms.

This propagandist diplomacy infuriated Prince Albert and embarrassed Cabinet colleagues who, like Queen Victoria, were not kept fully informed. But Palmerston defeated Russell’s intention of removing him from the foreign office by a famous dusk-to-dawn speech on July 8, 1850, in which he defended the British bombardment of Athens and the sabotaging of an agreement reached in London with France and Russia over British subjects’ claims against Greece. His popularity as “the most English minister who ever governed England” was such that Russell did not dare dismiss him until December 1851, when Palmerston, to stand well with the ruler of France, approved the coup d’etat by which President Bonaparte overthrew the constitution of the Second Republic.

Palmerston at once brought about the fall of the Russell government and might have joined the minority Tory government if the prime minister, Lord Derby, had been willing to abandon his protectionist policies. He served as a reforming home secretary in a Peelite–Whig coalition under Aberdeen, which in 1854 took Britain into the Crimean War against Russia and allied with France in defense of Turkey. His resignation in December 1853, avowedly in opposition to Russell’s reform bill, was ascribed to discontent with an infirm diplomacy. A switch to a more belligerent posture was regarded as the price of his immediate return.

Premierships

Under Aberdeen, Palmerston was a more loyal and reasonable colleague than was Russell. When Russell resigned as leader of the House of Commons because he would not oppose a motion for inquiry into the misconduct of the Crimean War, Palmerston succeeded him. With public opinion behind him, Palmerston became prime minister. His attempts to galvanize the war effort and remedy gross defects in many branches of the services were partly nullified by bad appointments at home and in Crimea. He was pressured by the French to make peace (1856) on terms he thought inadequate but which forced Russia to give up its control of the mouth of the Danube. He submitted to restraints by colleagues in quarrels with the United States, but when the Tory opposition, with Peelites and Cobdenites (followers of the free-trade activist Richard Cobden), narrowly defeated him on the China War, Palmerston confidently appealed to the electors against “an insolent barbarian” at Canton violating British persons and property. The considerable majority achieved in the April 1857 election was a personal triumph, but it melted away when he did not make the lion’s roar sufficiently loud in response to French attacks on Britain for harbouring refugees conspiring to murder Napoleon III; and Palmerston’s government resigned after defeat in the House (February 1858).

After the election of 1859 denied the Tories a majority, Palmerston resumed the premiership with Russell and the Peelite Gladstone, all being pro-Italian against Austria. This triumvirate ruled until Palmerston died. Palmerston knew that he would be able to rely on the Tories for support if Gladstone resigned and linked himself with the Radical John Bright. Although his determination that Britain “should count for something in the transactions of the world” was successfully challenged by Bismarck in the Schleswig-Holstein affair, 1863–64, Palmerston retained great prestige at home; and on the eve of his death he greatly enlarged the Liberal majority in an election on the cry “Leave it to Pam.” It was rightly said, after his death, that “the exceptional sway of Lord Palmerston could not be reproduced by any other statesman, or any combination” and that “the reign of moderate Liberalism” was over. He had been a conservative statesman using radical tools and keeping up a show of liberalism in his foreign policy; after him the defense of the Conservative cause would revert to the Conservative Party.

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